Abstracts
Introduction:
Why Adolescent Literacy Matters Now
Jacy Ippolito, Jennifer L. Steele, and Jennifer F. Samson
Adolescent Literacy:
Putting the Crisis in Context
Vicki A. Jacobs
Teaching Disciplinary Literacy to Adolescents:
Rethinking Content-Area Literacy
Timothy Shanahan and Cynthia Shanahan
Redefining Content-Area Literacy Teacher Education:
Finding My Voice through Collaboration
Roni Jo Draper
Cognitive Strategy Instruction for Adolescents:
What We Know about the Promise, What We Don’t Know about the Potential
Mark W. Conley
The Complex World of Adolescent Literacy:
Myths, Motivations, and Mysteries
Elizabeth Birr Moje, Melanie Overby, Nicole Tysvaer, and Karen Morris
Toward a More Anatomically Complete Model of Literacy Instruction:
A Focus on African American Male Adolescents and Texts
Alfred W. Tatum
Implementing a Structured Reading Program in an Afterschool Setting:
Problems and Potential Solutions
Ardice Hartry, Robert Fitzgerald, and Kristie Porter
State Literacy Plans:
Incorporating Adolescent Literacy
Catherine Snow, Twakia Martin, and Ilene Berman
Beyond Writing Next:
A Discussion of Writing Research and Instructional Uncertainty
David Coker and William E. Lewis
Toward a More Anatomically Complete Model of Literacy Instruction:
A Focus on African American Male Adolescents and Texts
Click here to access this article.
Alfred W. Tatum is an associate professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, where he serves as director of the reading clinic. His research focuses on providing effective literacy instruction to African American adolescent males, and he consults with schools across the nation on this topic. Tatum is author of the book Teaching Reading to Black Adolescent Males: Closing the Achievement Gap (2005). Other recent publications include “Engaging African American Males in Reading” in Educational Leadership (2006), “Creating Sentence Walls to Help English Language Learners Develop Content Literacy” in The Reading Teacher (2006), and “Addressing the Literacy Needs of Adolescent Students: Listening to their Voices” in The New England Reading Association Journal (2006).